The Morning Call

Grown kids still stuck at home? Change on horizon

- By Justin Fox Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

When the pandemic hit last year, young adults moved back in with their parents in a big way. Now the share of 18- to 29-year-olds living with parents and grandparen­ts is back about where it was before COVID-19 arrived.

Still, you might think that 42.8% of 18- to 29-yearolds living in their childhood bedrooms or maybe the basement — which is the September percentage estimated by University of Maryland sociology professor Philip N. Cohen from Census Bureau data — sounds like a lot. And yes, by the standards of the six decades preceding the Great Recession, it really is.

That the percentage has risen every decade since the 1960s is an indication that some long-run social forces have been at work. More young adults are attending college and thus delaying getting their own permanent lodgings, and in general the growing-up process has become more drawn-out. Immigrant families, of whom there are far more in the U.S. now than in 1960 and 1970, are more likely to embrace multigener­ational living.

Still, the big jump from 2000 to 2010 had some obvious short-term economic causes too. In the latter part of that decade, huge numbers of Americans were entering adulthood amid the worst economic environmen­t in 75 years, and they couldn’t afford to move out on their own. Things didn’t get much better in the 2010s as the job market slowly improved but inadequate housing supply in job-rich places plus tightened mortgage-lending standards kept making it hard for young adults to get their own places.

Another way to track this phenomenon is simply by counting how many households there are.

The number of households grew rapidly in the U.S. in the decades after World War II, initially because the war and Great Depression had held back household formation, and then because the many Baby Boomers started entering adulthood and moving out on their own. Household formation slowed as the growth in the young-adult population slowed and then began declining in the 1990s. But even as members of the giant millennial generation started entering prime moving-out age, household formation kept dragging, with the 2010s delivering the lowest percentage growth in at least 160 years.

So what happens now? The great pandemic return-to-the-nest has reversed, but there’s still a much higher share of young adults living at home than there was two decades ago. That might signify a lot of pent-up demand for housing, sort of like there was after World War II. And yes, household growth has been picking up in recent months, according to data gathered by Apartment List senior research associate Rob Warnock from the same Census Bureau survey as the living-with-the-parents statistics.

But a key reason why household growth was so slow before the pandemic was that young people (and not-so-young people) couldn’t afford to move out on their own. With a 15.8% increase in rents nationwide over the past 12 months according to Apartment List and an 18.4% increase in home purchase prices according to Zillow, that’s still going to be the case for many. After spiking early this year, the National Associatio­n of Realtors’ Housing Affordabil­ity Index has fallen back to about where it was in 2018 — with rising incomes and low mortgage rates not enough to make up for the big increase in prices.

The move to remote work over the course of the pandemic has had its own perverse effects. It made housing more affordable for those who could keep jobs in expensive cities while moving to cheaper housing markets, and at first it reduced prices in expensive cities. But it made those cheaper markets much less affordable for the nonremote workers already there, even as prices have mostly recovered in the expensive places.

Another significan­t developmen­t looms. According to the census’s most recent projection­s, the number of Americans aged 25 through 34 will decline in the second half of this decade and after that grow extremely slowly for decades to come.

The most obvious takeaway here is that demand for housing will slow. But who would have predicted half a century ago that the percentage of young adults living with their parents would rise so much? Slower growth in the young-adult population could, if it translates into slower growth in housing prices, conceivabl­y enable a reversal of that rise.

Or not: It’s relatively easy to project demographi­c trends; it’s much harder to assess their impact on the economy or asset markets or politics or anything else. But the propensity of young people to move out of the parental home seems like an indicator worth keeping an eye on.

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